Literacy as Moral Obligation among African Americans in the Rural Southeast
By (author) Amy Johnson Lachuk
Publication date:
28 October 2016Length of book:
136 pagesPublisher
Lexington BooksDimensions:
236x161mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9781498511926
Literacy as Moral Obligation among African Americans in the Rural Southeast providesdetailed descriptions of contemporary African American experiences with literacy and education in the rural South. In doing so, this book extends current understandings of sociocultural perspectives on literacy by illustrating how literacy practice is morally valenced, embodied, and narrative in quality. Johnson Lachuk argues that meaningful and ethical literacy instruction engages with perspectives that are embedded within a social and cultural community—that is, since literacy is linked to greater social mobility through institutional access for many persons, it is educators’ ethical responsibility to ensure that learners have the literacy knowledge required to do so. Recommended for scholars of literacy, education, and sociology.
Amy Johnson Lachuk’s Literacy as Moral Obligation among African Americans in the Rural Southeast is literacy research at its best and most readable. She dives deep into people’s lives to uncover something many of us have forgotten: literacy as force for liberation in the face of oppression.